Every year since he was 20, Anatoly Zhuravlev was ordered to march in official parades on Soviet Revolution Day, but on Wednesday the 35-year-old factory worker demonstrated proudly against the Bolshevik Revolution. "For the first time, I feel like a human and not a robot," Zhuravlev said as he walked along the Garden Ring Road with his lanky 15-year-old son, Andrei.

Every year since he was 20, Anatoly Zhuravlev was ordered to march in official parades on Soviet Revolution Day, but on Wednesday the 35-year-old factory worker demonstrated proudly against the Bolshevik Revolution. "For the first time, I feel like a human and not a robot," Zhuravlev said as he walked along the Garden Ring Road with his lanky 15-year-old son, Andrei.

Never before have the Kremlin's high walls echoed to such words of fury on Revolution Day. As rival processions of right-wingers and radicals trooped across Red Square's slippery cobbles, these were some of the slogans they shouted or the protest signs they raised, symptoms of growing Soviet anger: RADICALS: --"1917--the Crime. 1990--the Punishment." --"Communism Is Worse Than AIDS." --"The Fascists Annihilated Other Peoples, the CPSU (Soviet Communist Party) Its Own."

Never before have the Kremlin's high walls echoed to such words of fury on Revolution Day. As rival processions of right-wingers and radicals trooped across Red Square's slippery cobbles, these were some of the slogans they shouted or the protest signs they raised, symptoms of growing Soviet anger: RADICALS: --"1917--the Crime. 1990--the Punishment." --"Communism Is Worse Than AIDS." --"The Fascists Annihilated Other Peoples, the CPSU (Soviet Communist Party) Its Own."